Home / Money IQ
What's Your Money IQ?
Most people guess these wrong. How money-smart are you, really?
Financial literacy isn't taught in most schools — which is wild, because it quietly decides how the rest of your life goes. This quiz turns the essentials into a fast, no-judgment game. Each question comes with a quick explanation, so even the ones you miss make you smarter.
No jargon, no lectures. Just the money facts that actually move the needle, wrapped in a two-minute quiz you'll want to send to a friend.
- You invest $1,000 at 8% per year, compounded. Roughly how long until it doubles?
- About 3 years
- About 9 years
- About 20 years
- About 35 years
- What does inflation do to cash sitting under your mattress?
- Increases its value
- Keeps it exactly the same
- Slowly reduces what it can buy
- Doubles it every year
- How many months of expenses is a commonly suggested emergency fund?
- No need for one
- 1 month
- 3 to 6 months
- 5 years
- Which usually has the highest interest rate (the most expensive debt)?
- A home mortgage
- A federal student loan
- Credit card balance
- An auto loan
- What's the main benefit of diversification?
- Guarantees you can't lose money
- Spreads risk across many assets
- Doubles your returns
- Avoids all taxes
- An index fund mainly aims to…
- Beat the market every year
- Match a market index at low cost
- Pick individual winning stocks
- Avoid the stock market
- Your 'gross' salary is…
- What lands in your bank account
- Your pay before taxes and deductions
- Only your bonus
- Your pay after rent
- In the popular 50/30/20 budget, what's the 20%?
- Wants
- Needs
- Savings & debt payoff
- Taxes
- When is usually the strongest moment to negotiate salary?
- On your first day
- After you've already accepted the offer
- When you have a written offer in hand
- At the office holiday party
- 'Liquidity' refers to…
- How risky an investment is
- How quickly an asset turns into cash
- How much tax you owe
- How old an investment is
- Paying only the credit card minimum each month mostly means…
- You'll be debt-free fastest
- You pay far more in interest over time
- Your interest is waived
- Your limit goes down
- What does a credit score mainly try to predict?
- Your income
- How likely you are to repay borrowed money
- Your net worth
- How much you spend
- Two funds are identical, but one charges a 2% fee and the other 0.1%. Over decades, the fee…
- Barely matters
- Can eat a huge chunk of your final balance
- Increases your returns
- Is refunded at the end
- Dollar-cost averaging means…
- Buying everything at the lowest price
- Investing a fixed amount on a regular schedule
- Only investing when markets crash
- Converting all money to dollars
Good to know
Are these trick questions?
Not at all — they're the real fundamentals, just framed to be quick and fun. Every answer includes a short explanation.
Is this financial advice?
No. It's educational entertainment. For decisions about your own money, talk to a qualified professional.